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ACL is awarding a total of $1.25 million in funding to help
six legal assistance organizations strengthen programs serving older
adults. The first-ever Legal Assistance Enhancement Program (LAEP) funding
will focus on four key areas: outreach, partnerships, intake, and delivery.
Grantees will address a diverse set of issues including the opioid
epidemic, supporting grandparents raising grandchildren, utilizing
technology to advance elder justice, Medical-Legal Partnerships, reaching
under-served communities, and disaster recovery.
A recent Legal Services Corporation report found that elders
seek legal assistance for less than 20% percent of their legal issues. Gaps
in access to legal assistance are particularly pronounced among low-income
elders, elders facing Isolation by virtue of geography or language, and
elders living in rural, frontier, or tribal communities. Access to quality
legal assistance can help improve health and wellness outcomes for older
adults by promoting personal and economic independence, preserving access
to appropriate services, and supporting the right to live free from (or
recover from) the experience of abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation.
ACL is also awarding $2.8 million to help 10 states strengthen
their adult protective services (APS) systems through innovations
and improvements in practice, services, data collection, and reporting.
Alaska, New Jersey, Texas, Utah, Vermont, and West Virginia are receiving
State APS Enhancement Grants for the first time while Alabama, Arizona,
Illinois, and Washington will build on work funded by previous State APS
Enhancements. Innovative approaches proposed by states include a
restorative justice program and closer partnerships with tribes.
State APS systems investigate reports of abuse and
exploitation of older adults and people with disabilities. They provide
support and case-management, and connect people facing abuse to a variety
of protective, emergency, and support services.
Legal Assistance
Enhancement Program Award Recipients
- Legal
Services Alabama
will use a variety of strategies including an integrated point of
contact, specialized community education and outreach, and full
on-site services in targeted underserved areas to provide enhanced and
coordinated legal services to older Alabamians.
- The
Public Law Center,
in partnership with Council on Aging Southern California, will expand
and maintain an elder justice project for low-income older adults in
Orange County, CA over three years. The project will have a specific
focus on enhancing services for victims of elder abuse.
- Cherry
Street Services,
in partnership with Legal Aid of Western Michigan, will enhance and
expand its use of a Medical-Legal Partnership model to address the
social factors that can contribute to poor health.
- SeniorLAW
Center, and its partners in the
aging network and legal community, will respond to the opioid crisis
by enhancing legal assistance and access to justice for older
Pennsylvanians raising grandchildren and intergenerational families.
- Idaho
Legal Aid Services, Inc.,
along with diverse partners, will increase ILAS’s ability to identify
and provide legal aid to Idaho seniors statewide by performing
statewide education and outreach and developing a Legal Risk Detector
and self-assessment app.
- Legal
Services of North Florida,
in partnership with Legal Services of Greater Miami and the Florida
Department of Elder Affairs, will develop a replicable, statewide
model to improve access to legal assistance for elders with critical
needs including elders recovering from disasters, elders who are homeless
or on the cusp of homelessness, elders who are victims of physical
abuse, and elders who have been victimized by consumer scams and other
forms of economic exploitation.
State APS
Enhancement Grant Recipients
- The Alabama Department of Human
Resources will enhance system documentation and data
tracking to improve outcomes for APS clients. Alabama will implement a
comprehensive dashboard system to provide quick ad hoc reports and
improve statewide data quality.
- The Alaska Division of Senior and
Disability Services will work with the National
Council on Crime and Delinquency to implement Structured Decision
Making instruments through a web based data collection and storage
system. Alaska will also train APS caseworkers to use these new
assessment tools to support the system's work.
- The Arizona Department of Economic
Security will develop a program of enhanced
investigator training to meet the challenges of recruitment and
retention while providing clients with trained, culturally competent,
and committed investigators.
- The Illinois Department of Aging
will enhance APS training and outreach to the public and
professionals, with the goal of improving APS caseworker and
supervisor response to an increase in reports of abuse, neglect, and
exploitation and improve relationships between APS, law enforcement,
and other legal professionals.
- The New Jersey Department of Human
Services will design and build a database system that
will meet the case management and programmatic needs of NJ APS. This
will include development of a framework for statewide uniform NJ APS
data collection practices and expansion of data elements to include
all phases of APS involvement, alignment of data collection with
NAMRS, and consolidation of the existing county based databases into a
single cloud-based comprehensive information management system.
- The Texas Department of Family and
Protective Services will partner with UT Health, the
Tarrant Count DA, Harris County DA, Houston Senior Justice Assessment
Center, TEAM Institute, and Eide Bailey LLP to improve investigations
and client services by incorporating high quality forensic accounting
into standard investigative systems and practices, including enhancing
training for APS investigators on financial exploitation and
developing financial exploitation investigation checklists and law
enforcement reporting protocol.
- The Utah State Office of Adult
Protective Services will enhance services to
vulnerable adults in Utah by improving system infrastructure and
services aimed at financial exploitation. Their project will expand
Utah’s reporting capabilities to NAMRS, improve the quality of data
collection, improve tools for assessing capacity and protective need
for victims of financial exploitation, and establish a
multi-disciplinary team approach with community partners focusing on
victims of financial exploitation.
- The Vermont Department of
Disabilities, Aging and Independent Living will
create, coordinate, and maintain a Restorative Justice Program to
serve both victims and perpetrators of adult maltreatment. The
restorative justice program will provide substantiated perpetrators
additional options for restitution, rather than placement on the
Vermont Adult Abuse Registry, with the goal of decreasing recidivism
among offenders and reducing re-victimization rates.
- The Washington Department of Social
and Health Services, Aging and Long-Term Support Administration
will expand and improve their APS system. Efforts will include
developing a training curriculum for statewide use with a focus on
self-neglect and financial exploitation, creating and validating risk
and safety assessment decision tools, integrating a financial tool to
assist in financial exploitation determinations. They will also expand
outreach and collaborations with community partners, tribal
government, and law enforcement through multi-disciplinary teams and
Elder Justice Centers (enhanced multi-disciplinary teams).
- The West Virginia Department of
Health and Human Resources will develop, implement,
and evaluate a new standardized determination tool for APS referrals;
develop a new adult services monthly management report; develop
training curriculum; and enhance community outreach.
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